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Cell Phone

Original title: Cell
  • 2016
  • 16
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
4.4/10
32K
YOUR RATING
John Cusack and Samuel L. Jackson in Cell Phone (2016)
At the Boston airport, Clay witnesses a scene of chaotic mayhem when an electronic signal turns hundreds of cell phone users into rabid killers. Desperate to find his estranged wife and son, Clay teams with a train driver to battle the horde of murderous "phoners" as the city descends into apocalyptic madness.
Play trailer2:31
4 Videos
48 Photos
Dystopian Sci-FiZombie HorrorActionAdventureHorrorSci-FiThriller

When a mysterious cell phone signal causes apocalyptic chaos, an artist is determined to reunite with his young son in New England.When a mysterious cell phone signal causes apocalyptic chaos, an artist is determined to reunite with his young son in New England.When a mysterious cell phone signal causes apocalyptic chaos, an artist is determined to reunite with his young son in New England.

  • Director
    • Tod Williams
  • Writers
    • Stephen King
    • Adam Alleca
  • Stars
    • John Cusack
    • Samuel L. Jackson
    • Isabelle Fuhrman
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.4/10
    32K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Tod Williams
    • Writers
      • Stephen King
      • Adam Alleca
    • Stars
      • John Cusack
      • Samuel L. Jackson
      • Isabelle Fuhrman
    • 345User reviews
    • 142Critic reviews
    • 38Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos4

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:31
    Official Trailer
    Cell: Airport Outbreak
    Clip 1:49
    Cell: Airport Outbreak
    Cell: Airport Outbreak
    Clip 1:49
    Cell: Airport Outbreak
    Cell: Meeting Alice
    Clip 1:53
    Cell: Meeting Alice
    Cell: Middle Of The Night
    Clip 0:35
    Cell: Middle Of The Night

    Photos47

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    + 42
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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    John Cusack
    John Cusack
    • Clay Riddell
    Samuel L. Jackson
    Samuel L. Jackson
    • Tom McCourt
    Isabelle Fuhrman
    Isabelle Fuhrman
    • Alice Waxman
    Clark Sarullo
    Clark Sarullo
    • Sharon Riddell
    Ethan Andrew Casto
    Ethan Andrew Casto
    • Johnny Riddell
    Owen Teague
    Owen Teague
    • Jordan
    Stacy Keach
    Stacy Keach
    • Charles Ardai
    Joshua Mikel
    Joshua Mikel
    • Raggedy
    Anthony Reynolds
    Anthony Reynolds
    • Ray
    Erin Elizabeth Burns
    Erin Elizabeth Burns
    • Denise
    Jeffrey Lee Hallman
    Jeffrey Lee Hallman
    • Hog Tied Man
    • (as Jeffrey Hallman)
    Mark Ashworth
    Mark Ashworth
    • Bartender
    Wilbur Fitzgerald
    Wilbur Fitzgerald
    • Geoff
    Catherine Dyer
    Catherine Dyer
    • Sally
    E. Roger Mitchell
    E. Roger Mitchell
    • Roscoe
    Alex ter Avest
    Alex ter Avest
    • Chloe
    Gaby Leyner
    Gaby Leyner
    • Maddy
    Rey Hernandez
    Rey Hernandez
    • Cop (Rick)
    • Director
      • Tod Williams
    • Writers
      • Stephen King
      • Adam Alleca
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews345

    4.432.2K
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    Featured reviews

    6shaddixauth

    Disappointed Book Reader

    When I first read Cell many years ago, I instantly thought it could be transferred to an amazing movie. (And funnily enough, even cast the same actors in my eyes for both Clay and Tom.)

    However, the final product for the big screen was such a let down.. Though the scenes they took from the book were fairly accurate, they cut out at least 40% of the content. (Most of which is integral to the story telling and explaining what has actually happened.. The Raggedy Man / Red Hoodie Guy being one major oversight.)

    I feel like if you hadn't read the book to begin with, you'll probably find yourself getting lost too easily.. There was a severe lack of pacing simply jumping from scene to scene and some changes which in my opinion were for the worst.

    Overall I did still enjoy the movie, has a fairly unique concept and some very disturbing imagery, but had I have not read the book prior I don't think it'd be getting anywhere near 6/10 from me.

    SUMMARY: GO READ THE BOOK INSTEAD, AN ABSOLUTELY AMAZING READ.
    muratmihcioglu

    Y'know what's missing? The correct mood and the correct pace

    Watching it right now on Rai2, dubbed in Italian.

    At first I thought it was some kinda B movie despite the big names (maybe Samuel L. Jackson and John Cusack have taken the path of Nicolas Cage?) and the level of production. Then, to my surprise, I discovered this was a Stephen King adaptation, and not the brainchild of some wannabe King.

    Something's extremely off. Hard to put a finger on it at first look, but the director seems to have forgotten to set a particular mood and pace for the material in hand. This is so rushed it fails to be taken seriously. Even less credible an outcome than Zombie parodies.

    And to top it: I believe it requires some kind of special talent to have Samuel L. Jackson as a lead in a movie and still not even manage to make the outcome even moderately entertaining.

    I may not even make it till the end.
    5DVDExotica

    For Us, It's a Horror Film. For Our Grandparents, It's a Documentary

    Okay, people are going to tell you that this movie is dumb and corny and frustrating. Don't listen to them. Admittedly, they're absolutely right, but don't listen to them anyway.

    This movie is the closest we're going to get to a sequel to Maximum Overdrive from Stephen King, and it's actually pretty close. Instead of a bunch of disparate stragglers surviving in a world where humanity is overrun by machines being controlled by an alien force, we get a bunch of disparate stragglers surviving in a world where humanity is overrun by people being controlled by an alien force. So it also dips into Walking Dead knock-off territory, where everyone who uses their phone basically becomes a fast zombie; but on the plus side, this still has a lot of King vibes in it.

    Do you ever think about horror movies after seeing them and realize, if you view the film from the evil supernatural side of things, its motives make no sense? Like, "if the demon spirit wanted to possess the little girl before anyone could figure out what was going on and stop it, why did it spend the first 45 minutes terrorizing the babysitter and attracting needless attention to itself?" Well, this movie is like that: if you think about whatever mysterious intelligence is behind what's happening, what it decides to make the people it controls do doesn't really add up. But this movie goes the extra step, where you don't even have to do the thought experiment and shift perspectives to see that this movie regularly makes no sense.

    It's like King wrote down his dream and these people filmed it. And that's kinda cool if you're prepared to view this film like Kurosawa's Dreams or Fulci's The Beyond. If broken and contradictory logic is going to bother you, you're going to be kicking a hole in your monitor. And for all the fun King brings to his work, there's also his usual flaws. In this case: hokey characters. DJ Liquid? The "you're cute" lady? The King Of the Internet? But it's also kind of charming in a "King's our lovable grandpa who writes these crazy stories" kinda way, and this film gets past them easily enough with plenty of fast paced action and shocking violence.

    Other pros: Sam Jackson and John Cusack give their roles more weight than the script deserves. You actually care if they survive and worry for them in a way most lesser films don't manage. Stacy Keach shows up for a bit of fun, too. The story's also ambitious, playing with big ideas and isn't afraid to get pretty dark and cynical, which is nice to see in a more mainstream horror film with a name cast.

    Other cons: Most of the down to Earth effects are fine (zombies, gore), but it tries to depict some very big things that clearly just aren't in its budget. There's a scene right in the very beginning where an airplane explodes, which they really should've left off-camera, because it really looks super fake. And some shots in the film's climax look like a cartoon.

    Look, this is a heavy-handed movie for technophobes. Everyone who uses their cellphone turns into a mindless zombie. Characters walk through a brand new movie theater with a giant sign advertising "now with digital Projection," and then immediately into a drive-in movie lot. Keach gives a big dramatic reading to the line, "you can't stop progress, but you're never too old to fight it" before firing a bow and arrow. There's nothing subtle for miles around, and I'm sure we all know someone, probably older, who'll applaud the scene where people throw their smart phones into a fire, thinking finally someone else understands that change and technology are evil.

    But for the rest of us, it's a pretty amusing, entertaining time so long as you're willing to not question anything it throws at you. Fast paced, loads of thrills, our protagonists walk around with armfuls of weapons and ammo; and yet the film takes itself seriously enough that it never starts to feel like a bad joke. Silly sure, but earnest. All it needed was a rockin' AC/DC soundtrack.
    5cosmo_tiger

    Not terrible and this is worth seeing, but I just feel it could have been so much more than another in the line of zombie movies

    "Quite a problem these cell phones have caused." Clay Riddell (Cusack) has just landed and is talking to his wife about getting together with his kid again. When his phone dies he begins to look for change when all of a sudden he hears screaming and everyone in the airport falls to the ground. What happens next is unthinkable and now, in a type of post apocalyptic world Clay and a small group of survivors try to make it back to his family, before it's too late. I had no idea what to expect from this movie. I liked the fact that it was a Stephen King book, though I never read it, and the idea of technology leading to some sort of downfall is scary in its possibility. All of the excitement started to slowly fade away when the movie fell into what it really was… another zombie movie. The symbolism of cell phones turning people into zombies wasn't lost on me and the movie did have a message in that sense, but it essentially became just another generic zombie movie. Overall, not terrible and this is worth seeing, but I just feel it could have been so much more than another in the line of zombie movies. I give this a B-.
    5Nixon_Carmichael

    A decent film, despite itself.

    I am not a purist when it comes to adaptations, and I didn't hate this, at the same time I didn't love it.

    It almost would've worked better as a miniseries.

    Cell is a quasi zombie story by Stephen King, circa 2005, it's basically the thing Kirkman ripped off while developing The Walking Dead. The novel is a lumbering, melancholy at and times humorous take on the zombie genre and the mass market emergence of mobile communication devices.

    The filmmakers do their damnedest at placing it into a modern timeframe, but it's almost too well adapted. While I'm not against changes and remakes, they almost would've been better off just sticking to the material and going all in.

    Either way, I don't hate, it's just that the noncommittal to either the source material or the new take left the movie in a sort of state of limbo.

    Overall, I'm glad I saw the film, I just wish it was willing to pick a side and just run with it.

    Stephen King Movies Ranked by IMDb Rating

    Stephen King Movies Ranked by IMDb Rating

    See how IMDb users rank the feature films based on the work of Stephen King.
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    Production art
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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Among many differences from the source material, in the book, the zombie-like infected continue to have their brains re-written every night and evolve further psychic abilities, including telekinesis, which allows them to fly. This is explained as the infection having unlocked the human brain's latent supernatural potential. This idea is only vaguely alluded to in the film when the survivors of the boys school explain that the human brain is like a computer and that this could be the next stage in human evolution.
    • Goofs
      On Tom McCourt's advice, Clay puts a cellphone in the fridge to cool the battery down to make the charge last longer yet he fails to do the obvious and turn it off. Also the theory of 'making a phone battery last longer by freezing it' is dubious at most, but the characters may not know any better.
    • Quotes

      Tom McCourt: Clay, I'm really sorry about your family.

      Clay Riddell: Don't be sorry because there is nothing to be sorry about yet.

    • Crazy credits
      After the closing credits have finished, the catalyst signal from the movie plays for approximately 5-10 seconds, with no image, as if attempting to convert the audience.
    • Connections
      Featured in FoundFlix: Stephen King's CELL (2016) Ending Explained (2016)
    • Soundtracks
      I am glad, I am very glad, because i'm finally returning back home
      aka "Trololo song"

      Music by Arkadiy Ostrovskiy

      Performed by Eduard Khil

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Cell?Powered by Alexa
    • What is the title of the poem recited by Samuel L. Jackson's character in the office of open air cinema?
    • What is 'Cell' about?
    • Is 'Cell' based on a book?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 10, 2016 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • L'appel des zombies
    • Filming locations
      • Atlanta, Georgia, USA
    • Production companies
      • The Genre Co.
      • Benaroya Pictures
      • 120dB Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,323,012
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39:1

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